188:, Kadekaru led the birth of a golden age of Okinawan folk music. He was featured on public radio from its beginnings in Okinawa in the 1950s, and performed in a variety of venues throughout the prefecture, including local festivals and theatrical productions. Between original compositions and revivals of traditional songs, Kadekaru developed a repertoire of over one thousand songs. His unique sound came to be known as
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was released in 1965. He continued to release albums, and to engage in performance tours for many years. The end of the
American occupation of Okinawa in 1972 brought a surge in the popularity of Okinawan music throughout Japan, and marked a highlight in Kadekaru's career.
152:, and brought to a field hospital, where he remained for some time. It was feared that he would not survive to return to Japan, and a formal report of his death was sent out; Kadekaru did survive, however, and returned to Japan in November 1945, making his home in
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in the spring of 1949, and to his hometown after a nine-year absence; his father died earlier that year. Kadekaru worked for a time driving a horsecart, and later overseeing the kitchens at a
121:. After roughly three years in Osaka, in 1939, he returned home for a mandatory physical examination, as part of the conscription process, and was conscripted into the 46th Regiment of the
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Kadekaru was born in Goeku
Village, Okinawa Prefecture to Rintarō and Ushi Kadekaru. He was the eldest of three siblings, with two younger sisters. He began playing around with
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Over the course of his career, Kadekaru appeared as a regular on a number of radio and TV programs, as well as appearing in several films, frequently working with director
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117:. There, he lived and worked in a lumbermill, delivering firewood to local businesses, and occasionally meeting with other Okinawans with whom he sang and played
265:" (民謡名人, "folk music legend") in 1999. Though there had been rumors he would retire several years prior, Kadekaru continued to perform, and appeared in the film
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Growing up, Kadekaru quit school at times in order to help his family with the farming; he held a number of part-time jobs, and performed, singing and playing
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from the age of seven, and was strongly influenced by his mother, who was also a singer. At age eight, he collaborated with his mother to compose the song
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A number of memorial albums were released posthumously, including reissues of his earlier albums. Kadekaru is frequently included on
Okinawa
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Islands with a South Seas trading company. While on Saipan, he was also involved in an
Okinawan theatre troupe on the side.
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At the age of 16, Kadekaru left home, using money he gained by selling one of the family cows to pay his fare on a ship to
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Army. He served as a member of standby reserves for two years, and then applied to work overseas while remaining in the
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Prize, which he was awarded in 1995. The Ryūkyū Folk Music
Association which he helped found in 1962 named him "
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In the early 1990s, Kadekaru received a number of formal commendations from
Okinawa prefecture, including the
201:. Some of his most famous songs center on themes of the dramatic changes experienced by post-war Okinawa.
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Kadekaru made his first formal recording in 1950, though it was not released until 1958. Along with
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576:(沖縄チャンプルー事典, "Okinawa Champloo Encyclopedia"). Tokyo: Yamakei Publishers, 2003. pp 28–29.
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compilation albums. A memorial concert was held in his memory in 2001 in
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556:(嘉手苅林昌 年譜, "Kadekaru Rinshō chronology"). Spiritual Nature Island.
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was a
Japanese-Okinawan singer who was known as a representative
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for several years, where he taught, before living for a year in
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519:. The neighborhood where Kadekaru grew up is now part of the
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alongside classmates and others in the neighborhood in local
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406:("The Essence of Okinawan Island Songs")(1994), Victor
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Goeku was later renamed Koza city and is now called
199:, lit. "Kadekaru melody" or "Kadekaru intonation")
456:("Hidden Festival")(1998), Minamikazehara Tokushō
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506:(琉球新報). 1 March 2003. Accessed 7 January 2009.
271:in 1999, before dying later that same year of
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502:(沖縄コンパクト事典, "Okinawa Compact Encyclopedia").
466:The Great grandson of the man who drank a cow
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388:("Special Compilation")(1990), Marufuku
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204:Kadekaru established music schools in
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286:, featuring 145 musicians, including
250:, where he performed regularly at an
450:("Songs and Stories")(1994), himself
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628:20th-century Japanese male singers
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618:Singers from Kanagawa Prefecture
558:http://www.okinawa-tamashii.net/
148:, Kadekaru was gravely wounded,
623:Singers from Okinawa Prefecture
140:In 1944, while training on the
46:, 4 July 1920 – 9 October 1999)
613:Musicians from Zushi, Kanagawa
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448:Kadekaru Rinshō: Uta to Katari
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57:, singer of the post-war era.
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633:20th-century Japanese singers
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341:("Ryukyu Love Songs")(1974),
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423:Kadekaru Rinshō Before/After
350:("Heart of Okinawa")(1974),
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444:(1989), old shamisen player
404:Okinawa Shimauta no Shinzui
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560:. Accessed 7 January 2009.
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572:Kadekawa, Manabu (ed.).
364:Kadekaru Rinshō 20 Songs
608:Okinawan folk musicians
500:Okinawa konpakuto jiten
386:Kadekaru Rinshō Tokushū
160:troupe. He returned to
574:Okinawa Chanpuru Jiten
603:Japanese folk singers
554:Kadekaru Rinshō nenpu
521:Kadena Air Force Base
438:(1985), pot repairman
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468:(1998) — German film
310:Selected discography
223:ryūkyū min'yō kyōkai
498:"Kadekaru Rinshō."
392:Ryūkyū Festival '91
302:, and Rinshō's son
248:Ishikawa prefecture
373:no Kadekaru Rinshō
348:Okinawa no kokoro
296:Seijin Noborikawa
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410:The Last Session
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123:Ōita Prefecture
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300:Teruya Kantoku
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150:taken prisoner
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375:(1992), BCY]
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230:. His first
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186:Shuei Kohama
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598:1999 deaths
593:1920 births
472:Nabi no koi
430:Filmography
425:(1998), B/C
414:Toshiba EMI
400:(1993), B/C
366:(1983), BCY
292:China Sadao
290:performers
273:lung cancer
268:Nabi no koi
240:Gō Takamine
142:Micronesian
587:Categories
479:References
442:Untamagirū
178:Shōei Kina
144:island of
87:abolished
61:Early life
206:Gushikawa
108:festivals
412:(1996),
398:Utaawase
358:Cassette
332:(1969),
325:Marufuku
323:(1965),
254:resort.
232:LP album
127:reserves
55:shimauta
26:Kadekaru
16:In this
416:— with
162:Okinawa
119:sanshin
104:sanshin
68:sanshin
22:surname
462:(1998)
371:Heisei
343:Victor
288:min'yō
280:min'yō
244:Iejima
217:琉球民謡協会
210:Urasoe
184:, and
172:Career
146:Kosrae
135:Saipan
131:Tinian
37:嘉手苅 林昌
20:, the
454:Hisai
252:onsen
115:Osaka
79:廃藩ぬ武士
460:Beat
352:Elec
284:Naha
208:and
196:嘉手苅節
133:and
334:URC
89:han
24:is
589::
565:^
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380:CD
315:LP
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